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How do normative ideas around time and productivity shape the work of cultural institutions?

What if accessibility was the starting point for developing artistic programs?

What would cultural institutions be like if they were reimagined to center the needs of our bodyminds?

These questions and the challenges we observe and experience as chronically ill / disabled / neurodivergent cultural workers, formed the starting point of the residency Cripping Cultural Work. Earlier this year we invited four artists and researchers from the crip community to think together towards more accessible, gentle and slowed paced work practices. While we hoped to contribute to a positive shift toward a less ableist field, what emerged in the past months were profound shifts in our own understanding of access. Working together with Ari, Ashley, flora and Yoana we learned about living in crip time, the (in)accessibility of space, challenging our internalized ableism and what it means to ‘come out as crip’. We found ourselves in a community that we did not know we needed.
The insights we gained from this project will have a lasting impact on our practices and future projects at MaMA. As we continue to learn, we warmly invite other institutions in Rotterdam, and beyond, to join the conversation on accessibility within artistic production.
Most of all, this space is an invitation for our community to slow down, meet each other, learn and rest… You can read, listen or play in the library, lay down in the resting space, and explore the research projects of the four residents. Join us in our reflections on gaps, care, crip time, grief, on draining and being drained.

Hope to meet you soon,

Felicitas & Charli
project leaders CCW

Thank you to Stichting Bevordering van Volkskracht, Gemeente Rotterdam and Mondriaan Fonds for their generous support of this project.

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